Developer information

Description

Stop wasting your time with other study methods and let the experts at McGraw-Hill be your guide. With the Pharmacology LANGE Flash Cards app in your toolkit, preparing for the USMLE or pharmacology boards will be a breeze. As life rushes by, optimize your preparation time by using this powerful app where ever and whenever you can. Great for last-minute studying on clinical rotations, this app is the perfect tool to have at your fingertips. Written by medical students at Yale University, the information included in this app is not only relevant but presented in a clear, concise manner.

With 171 cards organized into 11 major topics such as antibacterial agents and cardiovascular agents, this app provides a rigorous review of key pharmacological concepts. Within each category there is an overview of that subject along with a selection of clinical vignettes to drive the point home. Each vignette covers a specific disease or drug with high-yield facts in bold. Test your overall knowledge by answering randomly generated questions from all categories or target areas of weakness by focusing on a specific category. Not sure how to treat peptic ulcer disease? Check out the gastrointestinal agents section. Need a refresher on the latest advances in anesthetic agents? Take a look at the information and 24 clinical vignettes in the central nervous system agent category.

Developed by current students who faced the certification exams themselves, the content in this app is not only comprehensive but presented in a way to ensure exam success. With each prototypic drug introduced by a clinical vignette, the user will be forced to think in terms of patient care instead of relying upon rote memorization. Overall, this app offers an intense, streamlined review in the days and weeks before your exam.

About the Authors:

Suzanne J Baron, is a medical student at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.

Christoph Lee, is a medical student at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.

Have a question or would like to share your feedback? Please send us an email at: [email protected]

Stop wasting your time with other study methods and let the experts at McGraw-Hill be your guide. With the Pharmacology LANGE Flash Cards app in your toolkit, preparing for the USMLE or pharmacology boards will be a breeze. As life rushes by, optimize your preparation time by using this powerful app where ever and whenever you can. Great for last-minute studying on clinical rotations, this app is the perfect tool to have at your fingertips. Written by medical students at Yale University, the information included in this app is not only relevant but presented in a clear, concise manner.

With 171 cards organized into 11 major topics such as antibacterial agents and cardiovascular agents, this app provides a rigorous review of key pharmacological concepts. Within each category there is an overview of that subject along with a selection of clinical vignettes to drive the point home. Each vignette covers a specific disease or drug with high-yield facts in bold. Test your overall knowledge by answering randomly generated questions from all categories or target areas of weakness by focusing on a specific category. Not sure how to treat peptic ulcer disease? Check out the gastrointestinal agents section. Need a refresher on the latest advances in anesthetic agents? Take a look at the information and 24 clinical vignettes in the central nervous system agent category.

Developed by current students who faced the certification exams themselves, the content in this app is not only comprehensive but presented in a way to ensure exam success. With each prototypic drug introduced by a clinical vignette, the user will be forced to think in terms of patient care instead of relying upon rote memorization. Overall, this app offers an intense, streamlined review in the days and weeks before your exam.

About the Authors:

Suzanne J Baron, is a medical student at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.

Christoph Lee, is a medical student at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut.

Have a question or would like to share your feedback? Please send us an email at: [email protected]